Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People here really love to humble brag about their wealth. Tone deaf, especially when so many people are struggling right now.
What an idiotic comment. Are you seriously saying bc someone can’t ask a question relevant to their situation bc others are worse off? A rising tide lifts all boats - the more successful I am, the more people I employ, taxes I pay, donate, etc. If a gift of a down payment can help someone get on the property ladder and move up, why not? OP, talk to your estate planner or wealth manager bc we were specifically given an amount we can “give” to each child annually w/o tax consequences. Each child has an account that is set up tax efficiently and will eventually be used for a down payment.
This---It's currently 19K/year. But you each give your kid that, and also each gift their SO/Spouse the same, and same for once they have kids.
Sigh, the same incorrect info, repeated again and again. You give whatever you want to your kids and not have to pay any taxes on it, as long as it doesn't total up to $14 million+ over the course of their lifetime (including from your estate, I think), and then you only start paying taxes on it on the amount over $14 million.
If you give someone more than $19k in a single year, you do have to fill out an IRS form that tracks what you are giving them each year. But you don't pay taxes on it.
And also, if you stay under $19k/year, you not only don't have to fill out the form, you don't have to include it in the $14 million lifetime number. It's the annual exclusion from that calculation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We're hoping to be able to do this for one child because we paid for grad school for the other. The problem is that one of us has a diagnosis that typically leads to very expensive long-term care. So we're not at all sure we can be handing over six figures.
You shouldn't---you should be saving/focused on your LTC
We know. We have several million dollars, though, and the other person has LTC insurance. So even if the one of us with the chronic conditions depletes a couple million in care costs, we'll still have a couple left plus the LTC for the other partner. Believe me, it won't be handed over unless we can handle it. Just food for thought for others who may not have considered a surprise diagnosis at this time of life.
Anonymous wrote:I was planning to give 100k to each kid. I have two. But one lives in a much more expensive state so I may have to give more like 200k. I wish I could give more to both but that's about my limit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:really?Anonymous wrote:This board is insane sometimes. Idk a single person whose parents helped them buy a house
Im in my 40s- live in DC and I dont know a single person who bought a house without some family help, either living rent free with the parents for a few years, a loan, , shared equity in the home, or just a gift from either parents or wealthy siblings who gave a loan.
Similar except early 30s in Arlington. We are the only ones who bought without family help and I guess we even got help cause we used the $25K we got for a wedding on our closing costs (since you can’t really have a proper wedding for $25K in this area unless you do it in your backyard or a public park).
Yes I certainly know people who got family help. But also know people who didn't. I guess it depends on where you live- I suspect those making these statements live in places where houses are $1.5 million+. Not all of DC (or even Arlington) is like that, but those people would probably never look at those parts of DC or Arlington to buy/live.
Anonymous wrote:Is the child married? If the marriage breaks up, are you comfortable with the spouse keeping half?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:really?Anonymous wrote:This board is insane sometimes. Idk a single person whose parents helped them buy a house
Im in my 40s- live in DC and I dont know a single person who bought a house without some family help, either living rent free with the parents for a few years, a loan, , shared equity in the home, or just a gift from either parents or wealthy siblings who gave a loan.
Similar except early 30s in Arlington. We are the only ones who bought without family help and I guess we even got help cause we used the $25K we got for a wedding on our closing costs (since you can’t really have a proper wedding for $25K in this area unless you do it in your backyard or a public park).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People here really love to humble brag about their wealth. Tone deaf, especially when so many people are struggling right now.
What an idiotic comment. Are you seriously saying bc someone can’t ask a question relevant to their situation bc others are worse off? A rising tide lifts all boats - the more successful I am, the more people I employ, taxes I pay, donate, etc. If a gift of a down payment can help someone get on the property ladder and move up, why not? OP, talk to your estate planner or wealth manager bc we were specifically given an amount we can “give” to each child annually w/o tax consequences. Each child has an account that is set up tax efficiently and will eventually be used for a down payment.
This---It's currently 19K/year. But you each give your kid that, and also each gift their SO/Spouse the same, and same for once they have kids.
Anonymous wrote:Only if and when it fits into bigger financial plan for them and I guess for me too. Right now it doesn't, because renting is cheaper.
If he wants to kill money in real estate, he can do that with his own money, not mine.
This need to buy a home will not come from my boys any time soon. It may come from family members, partners, and other well-meaning people who don't know our whole financial picture and goals. Nothing that math and little common sense can't fix.
Younger kid is getting an inheritance at 18. We are letting it grow for decades. Home equity is not the place for it, but as it's not my money, who knows what he will do.
At 18, both are already set to do well on their own. They'd be a little confused why the $100k suddenly which should be in the market as part of family money.
Anonymous wrote:really?Anonymous wrote:This board is insane sometimes. Idk a single person whose parents helped them buy a house
Im in my 40s- live in DC and I dont know a single person who bought a house without some family help, either living rent free with the parents for a few years, a loan, , shared equity in the home, or just a gift from either parents or wealthy siblings who gave a loan.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We're hoping to be able to do this for one child because we paid for grad school for the other. The problem is that one of us has a diagnosis that typically leads to very expensive long-term care. So we're not at all sure we can be handing over six figures.
You shouldn't---you should be saving/focused on your LTC